Sunday, 16 March 2014

"But how are seeds made?!"

The students have been observing, theorizing, and
asking further questions about the seeds and bulbs currently planted in our
classroom.

They are on a planting
frenzy! Digging and extracting seeds from
their snacks and lunches that they want to plant! As well, they are bringing seeds from home in
ziploc bags with the sole purpose to plant them! O.S. gave us a planting kit which included
soil and seeds to plant radishes, carrots, and onions. We planted everything!

We decided to gather together and share our thoughts
about all the things we had planted.

“What do you see, think, or wonder about the things we
have planted?” Mrs. Ralph

“I think a pit doesn’t grow roots, but seeds do and
bulbs do too!” E.S.

“What makes you say that E?” Mrs. Ralph

“Because the avocado pit is not growing roots. The
bulb here is, and the seeds here, have roots too. I don’t know if it’s true,
but bulbs and seeds are maybe from the same family!” E.S.

“I think an olive is a fruit and has a pit because it
grows on a tree, and vegetables have to grow on a vine or a bush and they have
seeds.” A.M.

“Why is a seed small and a pit big?” C.M.

“I think that seeds grow under the ground and pits
grow inside the fruits or vegetables.
The pit is so small when it begins and then it gets bigger inside them.”
A.M.

“I think that the avocado was big, so the seed is
big.” M.P.

“A pit is small and the avocado is bigger than the
seed.” K.E.

“Maybe the seeds grow under the soil and there’s a pit
inside the seed and it helps the seed grow bigger.” C.D.

“I think a seed and a bulb are different because a
bulb grows much bigger and a seed grows much smaller because bugs like to eat
seeds not bulbs.” B.S.

“How can we know if this (avocado) is a seed or a
pit?” C.M.

“Does anyone have anything to add?” Mrs. Ralph

“I think
they’re not all growing because they’re not all the same shape and size.” P.I.

“They’re different plants, so they grow differently.”
A.P.

We decided to plant the radishes, carrots, and onions,
leaving a few seeds behind for us to remember what they looked like.

During lunch, B.S. had the following wonder question:

“How come I can’t see any seeds in my carrot?”

“I think the seeds pop out of the green part of the
carrot.” O.S.

“I think the seeds are really small.” C.D.

“Yea, I think they’re so small you can’t see them.”
G.M.

“What about the onion and radish?” A.M.

“How can we find out what’s inside?” Mrs. Ralph

“We can try to cut a carrot, or radish, or onion, and
we can look carefully and see.” D.S.

The following day we had a radish, an onion, and many
carrots ready to be dissected!

After the radish was cut, the students observed that
it contained no seeds inside.

“I think the seeds come through the roots.” W.E.

“I think the stem holds the seeds inside.” E.S.

The students also didn’t see seeds inside the carrot.

“Why do you think you don’t see any seeds inside?”
Mrs. Ralph

“Maybe when they grow, they cut the stem open, that’s
where the seeds are.” M.P.

“Maybe it’s magic how we get seeds?” H.S.

“Maybe they are hiding and you can’t see them because
they are so tiny.” D.C.

Lastly, we cut open the onion.

“It’s like the bulb plant inside!” M.P.

“There’s lines inside.” C.D.

“I think that onions are bulbs because it looks the
same like the Amaryllis we cut open.” D.S.

“You can peel layers just like the bulb plants.” A.P.

“It looks the same as the bulb when we cut it open.”
W.E.

“Where did the onion seeds that we planted come from?”
Mrs. Ralph

“Maybe they make them in a factory by taking pieces
and putting them under a machine.” A.M.

“Maybe we got the seeds form under the soil?” I.S.

“Maybe the worms made the seeds.” A.P.

Students' theories on how seeds are made.

To further support our growing wonder questions and
theories, we read a few books including “A Seed Is Sleepy” by: Dianna Hutts Aston.

“What do you think a seed is sleepy means?” Mrs. Ralph

“In the winter, the seeds go inside the tree and
sleep.” D.S.

“In the winter, when the seed is crumbly, it is
sleeping.” G.B.

“It sleeps before it sprouts.” M.P.

“When you get a seed it is inside a shell. When it is
in the shell it is sleeping and waiting to grow.” B.S.

“They land on the ground and go deeper to sleep and
wait for spring.” E.S.

As we read on, the students noticed all the different
seeds and plants that were pictured in the book.

“The seeds are different because they grow all
different things.” E.H.

“I think that seeds are on top of the flower (pointing
to sunflower picture in book).” A.P.

“They need to take their time to sprout.” M.P.

“How do they grow?” K.W.

“They (seeds) tell us how beautiful they are going to
look and how colourful they are going to be.” I.R.

“Some seeds are secretive and hide inside pods.” A.P.

“What are pods?” Mrs. Ralph

“A pod is what protects the seed.” O.S.

“They have pods because they need protection.” A.P.

“If there are different amount of seeds, they are held
in different parts of a plant.” E.H.

As we continued reading, A.P. noticed something in the
book and shouted “We have this!” He ran to the light table shelf and grabbed a
pod from the basket! “This is the same
one like in the book (pointing to the Indian Almond pod and seed picture)!”
“The pod is split in half and it holds three seeds on each side which means it
holds six seeds altogether!” A.P.

Investigating different seeds using clay.

What perfect timing! During one of our discussions, Mr. Miller came into our class holding something very
interesting. He told us he found it in the
playground but had no idea what it was?
He then left it with us to investigate.

“I think we should go on a trip and find the tree in
the spring when it’s green!” A.P.

Lots of excitement filled the air as observations and
theories were made:

“The seeds are long so it needs to have a long pod for
protection!” W.E.

“The pod protects the seed from the animals who want
to eat them.” O.S.

This was a good time to introduce an iPad application
called Leafsnap. This free app uses
visual recognition software to help identify tree species from photographs of
their leaves. Leafsnap contains
beautiful high-resolution images of leaves, flowers, fruit, petiole, seeds, and
bark created by the conservation organization Finding Species (http://leafsnap.com/)

We used the map function on the app to locate our
school and it generated all the surrounding trees close by. One by one we
viewed each type of tree seed in hopes of discovering what Mr. Miller gave
us. As soon as we came to a tree called Catawaba
and viewed its seeds, we knew we had found our match!

“We were right, the seeds are in the long pods!” E.S.

“Trees make seeds.” N.S.

“There is a seed inside a pit!” E.H.

“A pod is like a shell!” E.E.

“But how are seeds made? When the earth was first made
and there were no seeds, how were they made? How did they get there? Seeds
don’t magically appear! Who made the seeds first?” A.P.

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About Me

I am a TDSB Kindergarten Teacher who feels privileged to share the journey of learning alongside the children in my class. Kindergarten is an exciting adventure where many wonders, explorations, and investigations take place.
I am passionate about inquiry and play based learning, and am greatly inspired by the Reggio approach to learning. I continue to learn and practice such approaches in my classroom.
Please use this blog as a window view into our classroom learning! I hope it may lead to new discoveries and inspirations!
Thank you for visiting!